TED Talks Daily - What long COVID taught me about life (and data) | Giorgia Lupi
Episode Date: October 16, 2024Data isn't just about numbers or trends — it's about capturing the stories that shape our lives, says information designer Giorgia Lupi. Following a long COVID diagnosis, she tracked her sy...mptoms meticulously over four years, the data culminating in a visual "New York Times" narrative that resonated deeply with many others suffering from chronic illness. Lupi invites us to consider data not as a rigid or objective truth, but as a living language used to better understand ourselves, offering a surprising shift in perspective — depending on where you look.
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TED Audio Collective.
You're listening to TED Talks Daily, where we bring you new ideas to spark your curiosity every day.
I'm your host, Elise Hu.
The world is made of data, as I'm sure you're reminded every time you're on a smartphone.
But information designer Georgia Luby makes a case for choosing more intentionally what kind of data to pay attention to. And as she shares in her 2024
talk, her attention to data actually helped solve a medical mystery in her own life. After a short break.
Support for this show comes from Airbnb. If you know me, you know I love staying in Airbnbs when I travel.
They make my family feel most at home when we're away from home.
As we settled down at our Airbnb during a recent vacation to Palm Springs,
I pictured my own home sitting empty.
Wouldn't it be smart and better put to use welcoming a family like mine by hosting it on Airbnb?
It feels like the practical thing to do,
and with the extra income, I could save up for renovations to make the space even more inviting
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Find out how much at Airbnb.ca slash host. And now, our TED Talk of the day. I know this sounds weird, but the thing that I'm the most passionate about in the entire world is data.
Really fun, right?
Well, I believe so.
In my practice as a designer, I use data to tell stories.
Stories that are anchored in numbers, but actually that are mostly defined by small and qualitative data,
which are the ones that can add all of the context and human nuances.
But what does that mean?
Well, for example, when Google wanted to help people understand the threat of plastic pollution,
we designed a microsite where you can drop objects that you use every day,
such as a disposable plastic bottle, and see how they break
apart into microplastic that pollute the sky and the ocean, making this invisible layer tangible
and visceral. Or when the clothing company and other stores wanted to communicate about inspiring
women, I designed a fashion collection where I showed the achievement of three amazing women scientists into data patterns
that are woven and embroidered into the textiles.
From a personal level,
data is the lens that I use to make sense of the world.
I live and breathe data.
And I love data so much
that one time, I used it as a writing language
to get to know a new friend across the Atlantic.
For one entire year,
we've been writing to each other every week,
but we didn't use a word of English.
We spoke data,
sharing the most intimate details of our days
and our personalities,
such as all of the time that we complained
and what it was about and was it even necessary,
or the thank yous that we said and what they were for, and even it even necessary? Or the thank yous that we said, and what they were for,
and even the time that we argued with our partners.
And right now, the full set of 52 and 52 postcards
happily lives in the permanent collection of the Museum of Modern Art,
which is quite nice.
Thank you.
But this mission took on a new meaning
when I became sick with a chronic illness.
I have been living with long COVID for the past four years.
Long COVID, if you're not familiar, is an umbrella term that I use to describe the various health consequences
that some of us have after an acute COVID infection or a COVID reinfection.
And an infection-associated illness like long COVID
can be mild and pass just in a few months,
but it can actually be extremely disabling
and leave you unable to attend to the basic tasks of your life for years,
or possibly indefinitely.
Since my first COVID infection in 2020,
and especially so after my reinfection in 2022,
I started to develop constant debilitating
symptoms. At my worst, I was completely housebound and at times fully bedbound. And for a while,
I even had to stop working, which has been the hardest for me. As I started to develop these
constant undiagnosed symptoms, I of course turned to data. Tracking these symptoms every day, such as extreme fatigue,
dizziness, heart palpitation, tinnitus, head pressure, nerve pain, and more. Tracking them
together with the treatments that I was trying, and then biometrics for my smartwatch, what I was
eating and what I was doing for the day, such as walking or commuting, and even my level of stress.
And I did that to hopefully understand possible correlations
and help me and my doctors crack this mystery,
but also to keep me sane in moments of deep suffering and uncertainty.
At a certain point in my journey,
I decided that I needed to share the data that I collected with people.
In fact, when you
read about long COVID, you usually read a list of symptoms that might make a healthy person think,
well, I'm tired too after work, or well, I have headaches as well, or yeah, after my last COVID
infection, I coughed for a couple of weeks. But I had never seen a thorough account of what it
means to live with a debilitating condition like this one on a daily basis.
I had the opportunity to share my story with the New York Times
in form of a visual op-ed,
when I used the language of painted data visualization
to share my journey day after day.
The piece starts with warm color brushstrokes
that surround the title,
1,374 Days, My Life with Long COVID. As you start
reading my essay in words, you see that the brushstrokes interact with the text, understanding
without a legend that every different color's brushstroke represent different symptoms,
and seeing that the symptoms aggregate by days. As you keep reading, a stack of different blood work and health tests,
just a sample of the many I've had, pile up on screen.
And then a body figure appears and gets overwhelmed
with all the different type of symptoms
that I've experienced over the past four years.
Here is where my spreadsheet, my data diary of sorts, shows up.
And as you keep reading, you encounter additional symbols for the hundreds of doctors' appointments,
the dozens of medications I've tried,
my hospitalizations,
and ultimately the tens of thousands of dollars
that I spent for my care.
And finally, you piece it all together
when you encounter a visual calendar of my year.
The calendar gets filled with all these brushstrokes and the additional symptoms.
And then you'll see an addition of handwritten annotation that can help you understand what was happening,
my vaccinations and my reinfections.
Ultimately seeing that the calendar of our lives changed drastically and dramatically after we got COVID.
And now back to the episode.
Now, this is a detailed story of my journey, but I always wanted to include other people's experiences.
And so I asked members of the long COVID community that I connected with
online to respond to one prompt. I hope that I will be able to blank again. And at the end of
the piece, you read hundreds of heart-wrenching hopes from people that hope to be able to walk
their dogs again, to play with their children, to get back to work, and simply to live a life that is free and independent.
Ultimately concluding with a collective hope
that we can all start living with a blank canvas full of possibility once again.
The response to the piece has been incredible.
I received thousands of messages from people sick with different chronic illnesses
and caregivers that in different ways
told me that they finally feel seen, that they now have a visible, striking and emotional evidence
to send to their loved ones to make them understand what they're really going through.
Data, if we look at them and represent them for what they are, which are human and nuanced
representations of our lives.
Data can move us profoundly.
Data can shape human narratives that can open conversations,
convey empathy, and even connect people.
As for me, you might be asking,
10 months after the publication of the essay,
I am doing much better.
I am not cured.
I still have limitations, a few setbacks, and I still take a fair amount of daily medication and prescribed supplements, but I am starting to paint
a different picture for myself. Now, this is my own story. I am no medical expert, and I don't aim to
speak for the long COVID community at large, but here's what I have done. Earlier this year, I decided to shift focus completely.
I started a new data collection,
one that is only about progress,
where the categories in my spreadsheets
are only what I have been able to do,
such as walking to the subway
or trying a few minutes of physical activity
without any consequence.
Of what I've been grateful for for the day,
such as a dinner out with my partner, and the few moments that I felt really good in
my body.
I have retired my smart torch, which truthfully was giving me more bad than good news every
day.
And I have stopped logging, and therefore paying constant attention and giving meaning
to my symptoms.
In the beginning, it felt scary. I felt almost
naked, dropping this built habit of monitoring my body so closely, something that gave me a
semblance of control, and also something that made me who I have been for the past four years.
But I realized something, that changing how I look at things also changes how things look. Dropping the need to observe my symptoms and shifting my focus
has reshaped the way that I see my journey.
Now, I want to make clear that the last thing that I want
is for people to think that these illnesses are all in our heads,
or that positive thinking alone can fix them.
That is simply not true.
This new approach is part of a program based on solid neuroscience
called brain retraining.
Every day, like thousands of other people,
I've been putting in hours to retrain my brain
to react differently to symptoms and trigger.
And this approach followed the principle of neuroplasticity,
which is our brain's amazing ability to rewire itself,
something that can help reduce symptoms
and improve the life of people with chronic illnesses.
This new approach and this new data collection
have been giving me hope,
something that I have missed for a long, long time.
Almost a year ago, at the end of my essay,
I also shared my hope at the time.
It reads, I hope that I will be able to take walks again, to snowboard, to sit at a restaurant and
eat with my friends, to travel to my home country, to be pain-free and simply enjoy a day in the sun
without symptoms or fear. I hope that one day I will get back to the person that I used to be.
And I am happy to report that I am on track for most of that.
The snowboarding part is still a bit out there,
but I will be taking a plane to go to Italy, my home country,
for the first time in years, in two days after this talk,
which I'm really excited about.
Thank you.
Thanks.
I believe there is a bigger message here.
The world is made of data,
but not the data that we produce with our smartphones or credit cards.
It's made of the data that we decide to give our attention to
at any given time.
Because what you choose to see shapes who you will become
and ultimately your entire world. I believe in my recovery now. It might be far away in time,
it might have bumps in the road, but firmly believing that it can happen and choosing to
look at it over and over despite the obstacles is the first step in that direction.
I know that for sure now. Thank you.
Support for this show comes from Airbnb. If you know me, you know I love staying in Airbnbs when
I travel. They make my family feel most at home when we're away from home. As we settled down at our Airbnb during a recent vacation to Palm Springs,
I pictured my own home sitting empty.
Wouldn't it be smart and better put to use welcoming a family like mine by hosting it on Airbnb?
It feels like the practical thing to do,
and with the extra income, I could save up for renovations to make the space even more inviting
for ourselves and for future guests.
Your home might be worth more than you think.
Find out how much at Airbnb.ca slash host.
That was Georgia Lupe speaking at TED at BCG in 2024.
If you're curious about TED's curation, find out more at TED.com slash curation guidelines.
And that's it for today.
TED Talks Daily is part of the TED Audio Collective.
This episode was produced and edited by our team, Martha Estefanos, Oliver Friedman, Brian Green, Autumn Thompson, and Alejandra Salazar.
It was mixed by Christopher Fazi-Bogan.
Additional support from Emma Taubner and Daniela Balarezo.
I'm Elise Hu. I'll be back
tomorrow with a fresh idea for your feet. Thanks for listening.
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